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La Pestilenza: The Black Death in Italy
The History Buff ^ | Aug 21, 2016 | Pauline Montagna

Posted on 05/23/2020 11:48:42 AM PDT by robowombat

La Pestilenza: The Black Death in Italy

Pauline Montagna

Aug 21, 2016

The Black Death entered Europe through Italy where it brought with it utter devastation.

The Black Death arrived in Italy by sea, first making landfall in Sicily in early October, 1347. By January 1348 it had landed in Venice and Genoa. A few weeks later it appeared in Pisa and from this foothold it moved rapidly inland, east through Tuscany and south to Rome. By the time it died down in the winter of 1348 more than a third of Italy’s population had perished.

Horrendous as it was, the Black Death, or La Pestilenza, was only the crescendo of a series of calamities that had hit the peninsula in the previous few years. Earthquakes had left severe damage in Naples, Rome, Pisa, Bologna and Venice. In 1346 banks in Florence and Siena collapsed leading to unprecedented economic disaster. Six months of almost continuous rain in 1347 had made sowing of crops impossible and flooding had caused a breakdown in communications and transport. Food shortages ensued, bringing soaring prices and famine. Meanwhile, a series of local disputes between the city states embroiled much of the north in seemingly unending, bloody wars.

With its patchwork of city states, official reactions and precautions varied from place to place. In Florence, the streets were cleared of refuse and entry was forbidden to the sick. In Milan, all occupants of afflicted houses were walled up inside and left to perish. In Pistoia, any citizen who visited places where plague was rampant was forbidden to return. No linen, woollen goods or corpses could be brought into the city.

But some towns hesitated to act. Orvieto’s town council remained silent about the plague, even when it was raging in not too distant Florence, as though, by pretending not to notice it, it would miraculously pass them by.

The people protected themselves as best they might. Those that could escaped the cities into the countryside where the death toll was slightly lower. Others walled themselves into their homes, hoping to isolate themselves from contagion. While the religious prayed and walked in procession, supplicating God for relief, others turned to drink and merriment to forget, perhaps raiding the cellars of the houses that lay open and abandoned, their occupants dead or in flight. But la Pestilenza was inescapable.

The plague seemed to come in two waves. The pneumonic form came first, bringing continuous fever and spitting of blood. Highly contagious, it could kill in three days or even a few hours. The second wave was the bubonic form with the characteristic, blood-filled buboes, which the Italians called gavòccioli, together with other symptoms, such as the dusky blotches of subcutaneous haemorrhages and the intoxication of the nervous system. In rare cases the buboes might break down and suppurate and the patient survive, but in general the victim would be dead within five days. The medical profession was helpless, unable to do more than advise a few rudimentary sanitary precautions, or relieve some of the symptoms, their own lives in constant peril.

Not only was the disease painful and infectious, it was also disgusting. Everything the sick body excreted, be it sweat, excrement, spittle or breath, exuded an overpowering stench. It was no wonder, then, that victims would be abandoned by all and left to fend for themselves. Their dead, or almost dead bodies, would be carried away by the becchini, the coffin bearers, recruited from the lowest of the low, and whose own lives ‘were not worth twenty-four hours’ purchase’. Corrupt and brutalised, they were known to extract bribes or female favours to prevent their carrying off the still-living.

The rich might be able to afford a funeral which would be followed by only a handful of people. More often than not, the priests leading the procession, on arriving at the church, would find three or four additional biers in their wake. The poor would leave their dead in the streets to be carried off on plain boards, two or three at a time, to be buried in communal pits. In the countryside, poor peasants collapsed in their scattered homes, by the wayside or in the fields, their animals and poultry running free, their crops abandoned.

With a death toll of up to 60% in some regions, the Black Death left radical change in its wake. Most commodities were scarce for a long period, their prices doubling as a result. At the same time, a lower population brought with it labour shortages and thus soaring wages. Those that could not find work turned to crime, so that more people carried arms. Unprotected orphans fell victim to mistreatment, sexual morality was flouted and the laws of inheritance ensured that the surviving rich accumulated even more wealth. And finally, communal government which had already begun to give way to the rule of rich dynasties before the Black Death finally collapsed altogether, so that within a few years, almost all the city states had been taken over by one petty tyrant or another.

Reference

The Black Death by Philip Zeigler (1969)


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: diseases; epidemics; italy
Some history made contemporary.
1 posted on 05/23/2020 11:48:42 AM PDT by robowombat
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To: robowombat

Is it true that the bubonic plague that came to the west started in China?


2 posted on 05/23/2020 12:10:12 PM PDT by Biggirl ("One Lord, one faith, one baptism" - Ephesians 4:5)
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To: Biggirl

Now people who read this will know what a real pandemic is and not this silly nonsense we have


3 posted on 05/23/2020 12:13:00 PM PDT by dp0622 (Radicals N racists dont point ftingers at me I'm a small town white boy Just tryin to make ends meet)
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To: robowombat

Boccaccio’s Decameron was written 1348-53; stories told to amuse each other by ten young men and women who had fled Florence to avoid the plague.


4 posted on 05/23/2020 12:22:53 PM PDT by Hiddigeigei ("Talk sense to a fool and he calls you foolish," said Dionysus - Euripides)
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To: SunkenCiv

PING


5 posted on 05/23/2020 12:37:30 PM PDT by Tennessee Nana
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To: Biggirl

My understanding always was that it came first to Genoa in 1347, from galleys and ships escaping a Genoese trading city in Crimea (today’s Feodosiya) that was under siege from a Mongol army, who had started dying in large numbers from the plague and catapulted the bodies of their dead over the city walls.


6 posted on 05/23/2020 1:27:28 PM PDT by M1903A1 ("We shed all that is good and virtuous for that which is shoddy and sleazy...and call it progress")
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To: Biggirl
Epidemiologic studies show it disseminating from China to the Middle East, to the Horn of Africa to Europe.
7 posted on 05/23/2020 3:12:13 PM PDT by 5th MEB (Progressives in the open; --- FIRE FOR EFFECT!!)
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To: M1903A1

Also I had read that it also came to Europe via Middle East and Constantinople.


8 posted on 05/24/2020 10:26:32 AM PDT by Biggirl ("One Lord, one faith, one baptism" - Ephesians 4:5)
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